Unauthorized Bread is the first novella from Cory Doctorow's Radicalized and is available exclusively (for a limited time) in audio on Google Play. This new audiobook, read by Lameece Issaq, is a tale of immigration, the toxicity of economic and technological stratification, and the young and downtrodden fighting against all odds to survive and prosper.
Get the book here: https://goo.gl/9jYcZf
Moderated by Heath Row.

Download hiqh quality version: http://bit.ly/sTTFyt
Description: http://events.ccc.de/congress/2011/Fahrplan/events/4848.en.html
Cory Doctorow: The coming war on general computation
The copyright war was just the beginning
The last 20 years of Internet policy have been dominated by the copyright war, but the war turns out only to have been a skirmish. The coming century will be dominated by war against the general purpose computer, and the stakes are the freedom, fortune and privacy of the entire human race.
The problem is twofold: first, there is no known general-purpose computer that can execute all the programs we can think of except the naughty ones; second, general-purpose computers have replaced every other device in our world. There are no airplanes, only computers that fly. There are no cars, only computers we sit in. There are no hearing aids, only computers we put in our ears. There are no 3D printers, only computers that drive peripherals. There are no radios, only computers with fast ADCs and DACs and phased-array antennas. Consequently anything you do to "secure" anything with a computer in it ends up undermining the capabilities and security of every other corner of modern human society.
And general purpose computers can cause harm -- whether it's printing out AR15 components, causing mid-air collisions, or snarling traffic. So the number of parties with legitimate grievances against computers are going to continue to multiply, as will the cries to regulate PCs.
The primary regulatory impulse is to use combinations of code-signing and other "trust" mechanisms to create computers that run programs that users can't inspect or terminate, that run without users' consent or knowledge, and that run even when users don't want them to.
The upshot: a world of ubiquitous malware, where everything we do to make things better only makes it worse, where the tools of liberation become tools of oppression.
Our duty and challenge is to devise systems for mitigating the harm of general purpose computing without recourse to spyware, first to keep ourselves safe, and second to keep computers safe from the regulatory impulse.
Transcript: https://github.com/jwise/28c3-doctorow/blob/master/transcript.md (CC-BY by Joshua Wise)
SRT file with detailed timings (created automatically by YouTube) https://gist.github.com/3193854

This was a wonderful presentation by Cory Doctorow, EFF Electronic Frontier Foundation at the Ethereum DEVCON4 in Prague on Thursday, November 1st in the Spectrum Main Stage Hall. Worth the listen! Good recap on history of importance of Privacy and Security.
Cory's group the EFF
The Electronic Frontier Foundation is an international non-profit digital rights group based in San Francisco, California. The foundation was formed in July, 1990 by John Gilmore, John Perry Barlow and Mitch Kapor to promote Internet civil liberties.
The video was recorded by Ethereum Devcon4 Conference Staff and mastered video/slides are credited to fellow YouTuber betterdot.
Description of this video:
Every digital system needs on-ramps and off-ramps, and all of those ramps are connected to the real world, where real governments make real policies that determine whether and how your digital tools will work.
Policies don't occur in a vacuum. Bad policies are sometimes the result of confusion or negligence, but more often they're the result of corruption, where dominant incumbents figure out how to put their thumbs on the scales to maintain their dominance and crush upstarts who oppose them. The more centralized an industry is, the easier it is for its dominant players to collude to achieve their common policy goals. Centralization is corruption's handmaiden.Democratic processes produce good governance. Without good governance, all bets are off: from information security to privacy, the game will always be rigged. And that's the conundrum: to get good policy, we need to decentralize. To attain decentralization, we need good policy.There's a lot at stake: the internet is more concentrated that at anytime in its young life, and it is growing to encompass every field of human endeavor. Getting tech policy right is the prerequisite for addressing the most pressing problems of our times, from climate change to inequality to xenophobia and racial and gender bias.
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Here is a re-recording of the talk that I did at at DevCon4 on November 2, 2018.
Transcript to the speech is here:
https://www.katherinewu.me/blockchain-crypto/2018/11/4/my-devcon4-talk-lessons-from-international-law-the-global-governance-model-amp-its-takeaways-as-applied-to-crypto

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences. Explore the little-known and sometimes surprising history of cryptocurrencies with Andrew Odlyzko and get a glimpse into the future of virtual currencies.
Andrew Odlyzko has had a long career in research and research management at Bell Labs, AT&T Labs, and most recently at the University of Minnesota, where he built an interdisciplinary research center, and is now a Professor in the School of Mathematics. He has written over 150 technical papers in computational complexity, cryptography, number theory, combinatorics, coding theory, analysis, probability theory, and related fields. In recent years he has also been working in electronic commerce, economics of data networks,and economic history, especially on diffusion of technological innovation.
About TEDx, x = independently organized event In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

Confusion abounds about Bitcoin, and the market technology that helps keep the alternative currency market transparent and stable: Blockchain. Compounding this confusion is the reliance on insufficient analogies used to describe aspects of these systems like "wallets", "coins," and "miners." These abstractions gloss over important nuances in how the bitcoin system actually works, and creates a hazard for regulators, policymakers and academics who use these analogies to shape law and policy decisions.
In this talk Patrick Murck -- Berkman Fellow and Co-founder of the Bitcoin Foundation -- unpacks Blockchain and some of the complicated property law issues that it poses.
More info on this event here:
https://cyber.law.harvard.edu/node/99137/

We will go over the history of the 1990s cypherpunks and major topics discussed during that period -- including remailers, the first discussions of crypto currencies, and various forms of anonymous electronic markets. In addition, we will present a free archive of the mailing list and topics for future research.

Decentralized Web Summit: Locking the Web Open
June 8‐9, 2016 Internet Archive San Francisco, CA
Designing Decentralized Governance
Panel: Amber Case, moderator
Primavera De Filippi: Primavera De Filippi is a permanent researcher at the CERSA / CNRS / Université Paris II. She is a faculty associate at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School, where she is investigating the concept of governance-by-design as it relates to distributed online architectures, such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, etc. Primavera holds a PhD from the European University Institute in Florence. She is a member of the Global Agenda Council on the Future of Software & IT Services at the World Economic Forum, as well as the founder of the Internet Governance Forum’s dynamic coalitions on Network Neutrality, Platform Responsibility and Blockchain Technology (COALA). In addition to her academic research, Primavera acts as a legal expert for Creative Commons and the P2P Foundation.
Max Ogden: is a software developer and founder of The Dat Project a grant funded software development non-profit. Max has lead the Dat team to work with data scientists, journalists and civic technologists to develop better tools for sharing datasets online. Prior to starting the Dat Project, Max was a Code for America fellow.
Wendy Seltzer: Wendy Seltzer is Policy Counsel to the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) at MIT, where she leads the Technology & Society Domain's focus on privacy, security, web payments, and social web standards. As a visiting Fellow with Yale Law School's Information Society Project, she researches openness in intellectual property, innovation, privacy, and free expression online.
Peter Van Garderen: Peter Van Garderen is the founder of Artefactual Systems and the original developer of the open-source Archivematica and AccessToMemory software. These applications are used to manage the preservation and access for hundreds of archival collections worldwide. Peter is a distinguished alumnus of the University of British Columbia's Master of Archival Studies program. He now works as an information management consultant designing electronic records and digital archives architectures http://vangarderen.net. Peter's current research and prototyping interests are in the application of blockchain technologies to recordkeeping workflows and decentralized autonomous collections.

Aaron J. Wright talks with Denise Howell, Peter Van Valkenburgh, and Warren Allen about Monetized Graphics: Monegraph.com, which is a verification system to allow artists to create digital art and use block chain technology to assign and verify ownership and originality.
For the full episode, go to http://twit.tv/show/this-week-in-law/278

Decentralization Web Summit, Muneeb and Christopher Allen get asked about Decentralization Identity and Security.
Muneeb Ali is the Co-founder and CTO of Blockstack Labs. Blockstack is an application stack for decentralized, server-less apps secured by the blockchain.
Christopher Allen is an entrepreneur, technologist, and educator who specializes in collaboration, security, and trust. As a pioneer in internet cryptography, he’s initiated cross-industry collaborations and created industry standards that influence the entire internet.
Decentralized Web Summit - Live From The Internet Archive
https://youtu.be/Yth7O6yeZRE

Decentralized Web Summit Panel: Naming & User Identities in Decentralized Networks
Chelsea Barabas, moderator;
Christopher Allen: Blockstream, Open source code and developer sidechains for advancing Bitcoin.As a pioneer in internet cryptography, he’s initiated cross-industry collaborations and created industry standards that influence the entire internet. He worked with Netscape to develop SSL and co-authored the IETF TLS internet draft that is now at the heart of all secure commerce on the World Wide Web. Though he’s worked within numerous privacy and security sectors, Christopher’s recent emphasis has been on engines of trust such as blockchain, smart contracts, and smart signatures, in particular decentralized self-sovereign identity.
Muneeb Ali: Muneeb Ali is the Co-founder and CTO of Blockstack Labs. Blockstack is an application stack for decentralized, server-less apps secured by the blockchain.
Joachim Lohkamp: Joachim is an entrepreneur and tech enthusiast. He is obsessed with knowledge, change and innovation. Currently, he is Founder and CEO of Jolocom, a Berlin-based startup building decentralized tools that lets you generate your own digital identity to assist linkage and attribution of data.
Jeremy Rand: Jeremy is Lead Application Engineer and Community Organizer of Namecoin, a naming system (currently used for DNS and identities) which backs authenticity of records with the same algorithms and code used to back financial transactions in Bitcoin. Jeremy wears many hats at Namecoin but spends much of his time working on applications which enhance online privacy.
Decentralized Web Summit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yth7O6yeZRE

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Today I talk about a few platforms that have been shut down in response to perceived "hate speech." The Daily Stormer is a very extreme neo-nazi news website. Recently Godaddy and Google took action to remove their hosting and domain services. But what will the ramifications for the future be?
Make sure to subscribe for more travel, news, opinion, and documentary with Tim Pool everyday.
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The new EU copyright law is going to have drastic affects on the freedom and openness of the Internet. Beyond banning memes, Article 13 of the European Copyright Directive 2018 will result in automated surveillance and centralized control of the Internet.
The directive makes online platforms liable for the content generated by their users. That means that on top of punitive and vaguely worded terms of services, Internet gate-keepers like Facebook, Google, or Twitter will be required by law to proactively monitor and censor content.
These online platforms will be required by law to create automated mechanisms to filter infringing content. Such technology would essentially turn into “upload filters”. These automated filters won’t be recognizing between infringing and legitimate content, like parodies, satire, commentary or other instances of fair use. To balance the flaws of automated upload filters, the directive also requires platforms to build staffed systems for filing complaints for illegitimate takedowns.
I make these videos because I believe standing up against power and illegitimate authority is a moral duty. I believe all humans are fundamentally free. But this freedom won't take care of itself. If you too believe this cause and want to help in this pursuit, you can donate to any of my cryptocurrency wallets.
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Music
'A System of Numbers' by CO.AG music https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCcavSftXHgxLBWwLDm_bNvA
Sources:
Text of the EU Copyright Directive
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:52016PC0593
EFF on the EU Directive
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/09/today-europe-lost-internet-now-we-fight-back
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/09/fake-compromises-real-threats-next-weeks-eu-copyright-vote
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/09/new-copyright-powers-new-terrorist-content-regulations-grim-day-digital-rights
https://www.eff.org/files/2018/06/13/article13letter.pdf
News Coverage
https://www.theverge.com/2018/9/12/17849868/eu-internet-copyright-reform-article-11-13-approved
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20180906IPR12103/parliament-adopts-its-position-on-digital-copyright-rules
https://www.theverge.com/2018/6/19/17480344/eu-european-union-parliament-copyright-article-13-upload-filter
https://www.theverge.com/2018/6/20/17482554/eu-european-union-copyright-filter-article-11-13-passes-juri-vote
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/07/new-study-shows-spains-google-tax-has-been-a-disaster-for-publishers/
https://www.politico.eu/article/plan-to-make-google-pay-for-news-hits-rocks-copyright-reform-european-commission/
https://www.politico.eu/interactive/copyright-reform-power-matrix-gunther-oettinger-european-commission-eu-policy/
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/jun/20/eu-votes-for-copyright-law-that-would-make-internet-a-tool-for-control
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/jun/20/music-industry-wins-key-vote-in-youtube-copyright-battle
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2017/apr/15/music-industry-youtube-video-streaming-royalties
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-09-20/silicon-valley-and-publishers-fight-on-after-eu-copyright-vote
https://www.billboard.com/articles/business/8474706/eu-copyright-vote-music-sector-final-lobbying-push
https://qz.com/1387581/article-11-the-eus-copyright-law-could-give-publishers-power-over-google-and-facebook/
https://qz.com/1389385/article-11-and-article-13-axel-voss-is-surprised-by-eu-copyright-law/
Opposition
https://juliareda.eu/eu-copyright-reform/censorship-machines/
https://juliareda.eu/2017/03/study-article13-upload-surveillance/
https://juliareda.eu/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/angelopoulos_platforms_copyright_study.pdf
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B7NZMlL3kj5qQzN0RXd2Z0JaR1JmemxhNDd2VmgzSjhFQXdj/view
https://juliareda.eu/eu-copyright-reform/extra-copyright-for-news-sites/
https://juliareda.eu/2017/04/copyright-reform-kills-eu-startups/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6EMOTLwYLM
https://europeancopyrightsocietydotorg.files.wordpress.com/2015/12/ecs-opinion-on-eu-copyright-reform-def.pdf
http://www.locusmag.com/Features/2008/11/cory-doctorow-why-i-copyfight.html
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The footage and images featured in the video were for critical analysis, commentary and parody, which are protected under the Fair Use laws of the United States Copyright act of 1976.

Kendrick Nguyen, CEO and co-founder of Republic, talks about how democratizing startup investing -- making it accessible to all Americans, not just venture capitalists! -- will lead to better ideas, a more robust startup market, and a more inclusive economy.
Formerly a securities attorney, Kendrick Nguyen has spent his career working to improve access to capital for underserved entrepreneurs in the US and beyond. In addition to co-founding Republic, Kendrick served as General Counsel and Venture Hacker at AngelList, and is currently a Fellow of Stanford Law School and the Rock Center for Corporate Governance at Stanford University.
Moderated by Brice Challamel.
To learn more, visit: https://republic.co/about

Brewster Kahle, Founder & Digital Librarian, Internet Archive
Twenty years after the World Wide Web was created, can we now make it better? How can we ensure that our most important values — privacy, free speech, and open access to knowledge — are enshrined in the code itself? In a provocative call to action, entrepreneur and Open Internet advocate Brewster Kahle challenges us to build a better, decentralized Web based on new distributed technologies. He lays out a path to creating a new Web that is reliable, private, but still fun — in order to lock the Web open for good.
Bio:
A passionate advocate for public Internet access and a successful entrepreneur, Brewster Kahle has spent his career intent on a singular focus: providing universal access to all knowledge. He is the founder and digital librarian of the Internet Archive, one of the largest libraries in the world. Soon after graduating from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he studied artificial intelligence, Kahle helped found the company Thinking Machines, a supercomputer maker. In 1989, Kahle created the Internet’s first publishing system called Wide Area Information Server (WAIS), later selling the company to AOL. In 1996, Kahle co-founded Alexa Internet, which helps catalog the Web, selling it to Amazon.com in 1999. The Internet Archive, which he founded in 1996, now preserves 25 petabytes of data — the books, Web pages, music, television, and software of our cultural heritage, working with more than 450 library and university partners to create a digital library, accessible to all.
About the Internet Archive
The Internet Archive is a non-profit digital library founded by Brewster Kahle in 1996 with the mission to provide “Universal Access to All Knowledge.” The organization seeks to preserve the world’s cultural heritage and to provide open access to our shared knowledge in the digital era, supporting the work of historians, scholars, journalists, students, the blind and reading disabled, as well as the general public. The Internet Archive’s digital collections include more than 25 petabytes of data: 460 billion Web captures, moving images (2.2 million films and videos), audio (2.5 million recordings, 140,000 live concerts), texts (8 million texts including 3 million digital books), software (100,000 items) and television (3 million hours). Each day, 2-3 million visitors use or contribute to the archive, making it one of the world’s top 250 sites. It has created new models for digital conservation by forging alliances with more than 450 libraries, universities and national archives around the world. The Internet Archive champions the public benefit of online access to our cultural heritage and the import of adopting open standards for its preservation, discovery and presentation.
http://www.ischool.berkeley.edu/newsandevents/events/20160301-brewster-kahle

Check out the Best of VICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of
This week on the VICE podcast Reihan Salam sits down with filmmaker Brian Knappenberger upon the release of his new film, The Internet's Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz. Today we have an in-depth conversation with Knappenberger about who Aaron Swartz was, what he did, the legal challenges he faced, and the legacy he left behind.
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Brian Forde is the senior adviser on mobile and data innovation to The White House. In his PDF 15 talk, he explains how blockchain can be used to support civic tech innovation.
https://personaldemocracy.com/conference

Juraj Bednar is an IT guy, but he is also fond of contemporary art and has collaborated with several art groups, e.g. with the controversial Czech ensemble Ztohoven. He talks about project The Moral Reform that he was part of.
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

Find out more at: http://re-publica.de/session/our-online-future-worth-sacrificing-our-privacy-and-security
Many business models and platforms powering digital life operate at the expense of privacy. Multinational companies like Google and Facebook already make billions, and are exploring new ways to monetize personal data. But this doesn't seem to be illegal, as users happily pay the price for 'free' services. On the other hand, groups willing to break laws are targeting our online security - including criminals looking for money and governments interested in surveillance and espionage. Are these two issues, privacy and security, jeopardizing Europe’s online future and digital culture?
Mikko Hypponen
http://www.f-secure.com
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Germany
(CC BY-SA 3.0 DE)

In this video I discuss Bitcoin Cash and its support among cypher punks as well as where I see the markets headed. This is much more of an opinion piece than most of my videos. Also don't forget that Bitcoin Lightning is still in development so Bitcoin Cash is not the end of Bitcoin, but it is the beginning of a war in the community over which method of scaling will reign supreme.

Harvard Law Professor Jonathan Zittrain dissects the recent FCC net neutrality decision and asks whether it's nearly as earth shattering as many of us suppose. After all: The chairman of the FCC is a former head of the Cable Television Association and the Wireless Association, so it's not all that likelihood that what was decided is really groundbreaking. The long-term question, says Zittrain, is to what extent Internet service providers will seek out different revenue streams outside of cash-and-carry delivery.
Read more at BigThink.com: http://goo.gl/O8uR
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Transcript: Recently the FCC took another swing at what's loosely called net neutrality. I guess I'd count myself among those who are not sure it's an earth shattering deal. It shouldn't come as that much of a surprise that a chairman of the FCC who is a former head of the Cable Television Association and the Wireless Association is not done anything that's going to bring anything down. I guess what's most notable about the rules as they're coming down again is they're applying to wireless, that had been left off the table by rules that were in place from 2010 to 2014. But I suspect that most Internet service providers can live within these rules. The long-term question is going to be to what extent Internet service providers feel they need to earn money through something other than cash and carry delivery of what we think of as generic broadband. You know, we're just going to give you good bandwidth; you're going to pay for it; have fun out there is the Internet service provider of the traditional vain.
If they're wanting to cut a bunch of what you might think of as more interesting deals, well wait a minute maybe we'll charge more for one particular provider like Google to have to reach our eyeballs of our subscribers and Google can pay for that. And maybe, this is the ideal case for this kind of argument that net neutrality doesn't allow, maybe it will even turn out that we can offer free Internet access to people. They'll pay nothing per month because it will get paid for, subsidized, on the other side as the Google's of the world pay to beat a path to the door of our subscribers. That might be a good idea. The thing is that the number of outs that involve some form of differential pricing, of being very canny about whose bits are coming from where and going to where and whether those will be treated differently or charged differently, more frequently I think would not result in free Internet for consumers but in added revenue for the company that simply goes back to the shareholders and really is reflecting the fact that there isn't a lot of competition in America today for the provision of broadband.
If you live in a house and you want a fast Internet connection you don't have a ton of choices in many places, you only have one choice for who you're going to use. And at that point they don't have the same incentives that a competitive marketplace would give. And that's one reason why something like that net neutrality makes a lot of sense. It's been interesting to see that around the world there's been a laboratory for different regulatory and technical regimes for implementation of Internet access. In a place like the United Kingdom they don't talk much about net neutrality because they have a regime where British Telecom, the legacy government affiliated telephony provider is a wholesaler and then Virgin Broadband and others can resell it. And that means that if one started to get to canny, no Google for you because Google refused to pay us, their subscribers would leave and use a different ISP, even though it's all going over the same pipe you might not need net neutrality the way that you see it shaping up in America where there isn't that open access mandate. The third category to keep an eye out for over the years is municipal broadband. Should it be that just like governments provide roads and fill or don't fill potholes in them that municipalities might choose to offer fiber to each home. You'd pay them a flat fee and that's the end of the story.
One of the interesting artifacts of the recent FCC decision is actually overturning state level legislative bans on municipal broadband provision that had been enacted in part at the behest of existing Internet service providers that would prefer not to compete with the government to provide Internet access. And we will see now maybe a couple cities in which the municipalities will have a chance to offer it as well. And I'm curious to see where that leads.

Listen to the full episode here:
https://www.patreon.com/posts/20900485
This week we continue the ecstatically futural mind-jazz duet with cyborg performance artist and body-machine interface master hacker Onyx Ashanti, exploring the frontiers of new meta-languages emerging at the intersection of the born and manufactured, and creative possibilities thereof.
Onyx Online:
http://onyx-ashanti.com
http://youtube.com/onyxashanti
http://twitter.com/onyxashanti
Anyone who enjoys this episode will also like these essays from my upcoming book:
“The Future is More of Everything”
https://medium.com/@michaelgarfield/how-to-live-in-the-future-part-2-the-future-is-entropic-2faa4aa6f433
“The Future Is Disgusting”
https://medium.com/@michaelgarfield/the-future-is-disgusting-911379af30fe
“Being Every Drone: The Future of XR & Robotic Telepresence”
https://medium.com/@michaelgarfield/being-every-drone-the-future-of-xr-robotic-telepresence-19f12889da78
In this episode, we discuss:
Fractal Sonocybernetics & The Future of Language
The neurological and experiential differences between speaking and singing, between continuous movement and discontinuous speech.
“The English alphabet is created of embedded Fibonacci relationships…there are five vowels; all five of those vowels are odd numbers…between A and E is three letters; between E and I is three letters; between I and O is five; O and U is five; and between U and the end of the alphabet, wrapping around to the A, is five letters…two 3s and three 5s is also one of these relationships. There are twenty-one consonants in the alphabet, and twenty-one is one of these Fibonacci values.”
Book: Darwin’s Pharmacy by Richard Doyle
Reaching beyond language to communicate the ineffable psychedelic experience…only to create new (insufficient) languages.
Violent counter-reactions to the sudden is-ness of black swan events (like the election of Barack Obama OR Donald Trump).
“Those of us that get it and CAN talk about it, it is necessary for us to talk about it. But then to reinforce what we’re talking about with action.”
The moral imperative of people with a vision to communicate it. The ethical necessity of artists to create and share.
Music as an irreplaceable core module of an n-plus-one-dimensional future language.
“We’re like some kind of ant, or bee, and our honey is technology.”
With respect to the Singularity: The end of the world? The end of WHAT world? WHAT DOES “END” EVEN MEAN?
What happens to identity politics in an age of exponential change and its metamorphosis of “baseline” human identity into something plural, mutable, and ineffably always-evolving?
“We have to burst out of identity politics in a way such that it is BORING, that it is MUNDANE, that our perception of identity politics is that it is no longer [the house-sized thing that I am within], it is [identity politics, this thing I am holding in my hand and I can examine like I would examine a grapefruit].”
“One’s reality is limited by their ability to comprehend complexity.”
If we act from the understanding that our brains are harmonically organized, our thoughts and actions can begin to take on that harmonic organization…
Gamma brainwaves as the lubricating medium of harmonically coherent brain activity, just as blockchain-enabled microtransactions enables a fluid economy and liquid democracy in the global brain…
How to become resilient in a networked society by using failure to inform the design of new evolutionary systems.
“Bitcoin…it’s unstoppable. Right now. And when it IS stoppable, we will have a new version that is vastly less stoppable than this one. And then it will get attacked mercilessly…and then maybe someone brings the quantum chain down. And then we create something we can’t even imagine at this point…”
“I feel that Bit Torrent begat Bitcoin.”
“The interesting thing with the Bitcoin community is that we’re all working for a company that…there’s nobody working for that company!”
Is crypto the cathedral of planetary culture we’ve been waiting for?
Onyx waxes rhapsodic about the blockchain.
Open-source space program.
Book: Project Hieroglyph (containing Cory Doctorow’s short story, “The Man Who Sold The Moon”)
Onyx uses Sun Ra and the afro-futurist mythology that he created repeatedly to make a point about legendary creative badassery.
“You have to share it in such a way that each person feels that they are absorbing it. And want to. ‘How can I get involved?’”
Pay No Attention to The Realm of Loud Dumb Shit
What a bad example of a good future cyberpunk is… (Tyrell Corporation in Blade Runner, etc.)
Story/Film: Johnny Mnemonic by William Gibson
Imagin

Social Media Censorship Debate [Or, 'I, Siliconious']
This video is an artistic statement on what is going on today with politics and censorship. Specifically the Tommy Robinson censorship and imprisonment, social media censorship of conservatives, online censorship in Germany and the UK, and government censorship/totalitarianism in Europe generally.
We have seen numerous conservative voices silenced online as of late- Tommy Robinson, Lauren Southern, Brittany Pettibone, Jared Taylor, and others.
We have also seen the mainstream SJW press attack thinkers like Jordan Peterson, Douglas Murray, and Stefan Molyneux in a form of 'soft censorship', where if you speak out against the Progressive narrative you risk being labelled with career-ending invectives.
This video is about these extremely important issues.
Two important notes:
One: This video highlights a couple tech CEO's specifically. I should note though that I don't know much at all about Jack Dorsey or Jack Conte personally. For all I know they could be high integrity men on a personal basis when you take the politics out of the equation…. In addition, *given the climate we live in today* I can understand and sympathize with Jack Conte's decision vis a vis Lauren Southern after the Mediterranean ship thing from a *business liability* standpoint as he has a fiduciary duty to his investors/shareholders/employees/etc.
I don't include the above disclaimer to equivocate, but rather to elaborate on the fact that it is not Conte and Dorsey or any of their Silicon Valley brethren as individuals that are the problem per se- the PROBLEM is the radical, destructive religion of postmodern-progressivism and the EVIL it represents.
This religion's ability to do evil is manifested in various ways. Sometimes out of maliciousness, sometimes out of resentment, sometimes out of fear, and (usually) out of naivety or brainwashing (which I would imagine is probably the case with Conte and Dorsey, since they are highly-insulated from its true effects).
Two: This video was inspired aesthetically to a large extent by 'Pimp My Reich' by the Youtube channel Ancient Reality, which you can see here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ullUnUP2J4Q&t=99s
Ancient Reality is an AMAZING Youtube channel and I would encourage you to donate to him/support him here: https://www.patreon.com/ancientreality
(Note: I do not know Ancient Reality and have never communicated with him- I just wanted to give credit where credit is due- I also sampled one tiny clip from Pimp My Reich in the above video as part of the education/analysis).
Also: That sample and all the others in the above clip are used under Fair Use, except for a few B-Roll shots which are copyright free ones from Pixabay (see full disclaimer below).
Thanks and I hope you enjoy the video!
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To get my free book of essays on masculinity and men’s self-improvement, go to www.conqueringmodernity.com/guide
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Check out my newest book "Identity Rising: How Nationalist Millennials Will Re-Take Europe, Save America, And Become The New 'Greatest Generation'" here: http://amzn.to/2Cquy9E
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All images and all video footage is either free to use or share (e.g. Pixabay, etc) or is sampled under Fair Use, as per: "Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research."
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Music:
Royaltee Free Music. Can-Can by Offenbach. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R-1ctykNq30
Ed Solo & Deekline ft Gala Orsborn Hit The Road Jack Original Mix No Copyright Song https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vhkp3qgATGo
Adi Judiantara -Tape Rewind Sound Effect https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EMaZzfvQMI
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Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/J_Langness
Follow me on Gab: https://gab.ai/J_Langness
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If you enjoyed this video please share it on social media! Also…
Subscribe to this channel by clicking the below link to see more videos just like this!: http://bit.ly/2DWXenS
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Recommended Products:
-Get my favorite book- Where Men Win Glory- plus any other book on audio FREE by trying out Amazon’s ‘Audible’ program: https://amzn.to/2LaqHxG
-MyPatriotSupply - Long-term storage food for collapse/zombie apocalypse: http://bit.ly/2LzVMPF
-Tubebuddy- if you have a Youtube channel you MUST use Tubebuddy!: http://bit.ly/2JXNGeP
-Clickfunnels- for website creation/funnels/all aspects of online business- if you have a website or business you NEED Clickfunnels! http://bit.ly/2AjOr1U
-Coinbase- buy/store/transact Bitcoin- everyone should have at least 1% of their net worth in Bitcoin due to it continued potential for radical gains. Get 10$ through this link: http://bit.ly/2K3zm4e
-Get Virtual Shield VPN- (EVERYONE needs a VPN nowadays): http://bit.ly/2NNihxT

Singularity.FM is the first and best known singularity podcast – the place where we interview the future.
Singularity.FM is a series of singularity podcast interviews with the best scientists, writers, entrepreneurs, film-makers, philosophers and artists, debating issues such as the technological singularity, transhumanism, artificial intelligence, life-extension and ethics: because technology is not enough!
Past guests of this singularity podcast include people such as Ray Kurzweil, Peter Diamandis, Noam Chomsky, Stuart Hameroff, Marvin Minsky, Aubrey de Grey, Max More, Michio Kaku, Vernor Vinge, Cory Doctorow, Charles Stross and many, many others.
https://www.singularityweblog.com/category/podcasts/
6 years on our #Future, #Transhumanism, #AI, #Bitcoin, #SynBio, #LifeExtension, #Ethics etc Help me do another 6 ;-)
Video highlights from past Singularity 1on1 episodes that reveal what this Singularity.FM Podcast is all about ;-)
Please support my podcast here: https://www.singularityweblog.com/donate-and-support-singularity-weblog/

A Meeting of the Minds! POA.network, MyEtherWallet, Ubiq and RSK are all building the same dream. Giveth is trying to bring them all together so that we can get an Open Source Blockchain Explorer NOW!
Explorer by POA Network
Github: https://github.com/poanetwork/poa-explorer
Block Explorer: https://explorer-sokol.poa.network/en
(Dockyard) - Project 1: https://github.com/poanetwork/poa-explorer/projects/1
(Gaslight) - Project 2: https://github.com/poanetwork/poa-explorer/projects/2
(Plataformatec) Project 3: https://github.com/poanetwork/poa-explorer/projects/3
EthVM - MEW
https://github.com/enKryptIO/
Database: RethinkDB
Backend: Modified Geth, Stateless websockets for scaling
Frontend: Vuejs
Shokku (Infura clone and more things to come):
https://github.com/ubiq/shokku
Thank you for watching! See you in 2 weeks :-D
Giveth is re-engineering charitable giving, by creating an entirely free, open-source platform, built on the Ethereum Blockchain.
Join http://join.giveth.io
Donate http://donate.giveth.io
Discover http://giveth.io

This talk will introduce a cheat engine using demos of hacking simple games such as Counterstrike and/or emulated games like Super Mario 64 etc. This talk will open the kids' horizons to developing game cheats and will challenge them to build skills in reverse engineering to combine with skills in the cheat engine tool

Have a neat tip, trick, hack, or solution for Drupal? We want to hear from you! You don't have to be a pro or an expert to share your favorite Drupal (or web) knowledge.
This series of five-minute lightning talks promises to be fun and informative for Drupalers of all levels. Learn more about this new event.
Lightning Talks
1. Drupal & Bitcoin, jbrown
2. Drupal 8 Console, jmolivas
3. The Unforseen: A Healthy Attitude To Risk on Web Projects, steveparks
4. Druphpet, k0teg
5. Continuous Delivery as the Agile Successor, august1914
6. #D8in8 initiative, stella
7. Just a thought for discussion about security, amstercad
8. Drupal as a Building Management System, idevit

Industry 2.0
About TEDx, x=independently organize event
In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-
organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience.
At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep
discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized
events are branded TEDx, where x=independently organized TED event.
The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but
individual TEDx events are self-organized.*
(*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

INDIEGOGO: https://www.indiegogo.com/at/zioncity
FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/wwwzioncity/
TWITTER: http://twitter.com/SystemsAbsolute
INSTAGRAM: http://instagram.com/zion.city_/
ZION.CITY is the first DECENTRALIZED SOCIAL NETWORK & MESSAGING SYSTEM for the INTERNET OF THINGS
Our Mission is to help People & Things come together as ONE and work for greater good of our Planet and all of the mankind. Our technology provides complete ONLINE PRIVACY for You and 20 billion + SMART DEVICES (according to Gartner) that about to join the network of The Internet of Things in next 5 years.
ZION.CITY was built on the next generation Blockchain crypto technology (Decentralized Internet Operational System (Bitcoin, Ethereum alike)) and powered by Artificial Emotional Intelligence Bots to help You to optimize Your personal and Business processes to save time and money to set you FREE to Live, Love and Do Things that makes You and others happy.
We used simple cognitive architecture to achieve infinite scalability of finite systems in ONE network so the more People & Things join the network the faster and more efficient it works. With unique User Interface Design we optimized entire Internet social sharing and messaging experience in one simple to use Application that is FREE for everyone to use..
WELCOME TO THE FUTURE OF THE INTERNET OF PEOPLE & THINGS
WELCOME TO THE EVOLUTION BY OPTIMIZATION...
tags: INTERNET OF THINGS, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, IoT, INTERNET OF EVERYTHING, INSTANT MESSENGER, BOT, BOTS, AI, USE THE POWER OF THE INTERNET OF THINGS, NEW SOCIAL NETWORK FOR THE INTERNET OF THINGS, BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY, ETHEREUM, BITCOIN, MINING, BLOCKCHAIN TECHNOLOGY NEXT GENERATION, BITCOIN ONLINE, ETHEREUM PROJECTS HOW TO, CRYPTO CURRENCY, blockchain, BLOCKCHAIN for the Internet of THINGS, IBM, WINDOWS BOTS,

Just how stupid does your government need you to be?
"I do not know how long such liberties will be allowed. The stations of uncensored expression are closing down; the lights are going out; but there is still time for those to whom freedom and parliamentary government mean something, to consult together.
Let me, then, speak in truth and earnestness while time remains."
-Winston Churchill
October 16, 1938
Digital economy bill rushed through
http://tinyurl.com/yhzbqc2
Digital Economy Bill: Quick Guide
http://tinyurl.com/yeefdp5
YouTube 'under threat' from Digital Economy Bill changes
http://tinyurl.com/ygxkwuw
Government will rush
http://tinyurl.com/ylozmhx
Mark Thomas talks about the Digital economy Bill
http://tinyurl.com/yaun7ck
Opening and closing score sampled from 'New World Order' by DJ Chris Geo
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/truth-frequency
TheAntiTerrorist Handbook on Amazon
UK: http://tinyurl.com/mwgmjo
US: http://tinyurl.com/mpauum
CA: http://tinyurl.com/y9c5qdk
Standing Under﻿ Freedom on Amazon
UK: http://tinyurl.com/39kp88k
US: http://tinyurl.com/37pexft
CA: http://tinyurl.com/367ooef
For the past few years I've been inundated with questions about how people can contribute to my finances, often in the hope that it might empower me to produce more videos, but I have declined because the frequency of my broadcasts is not related to how much i have, rather to my available time and inspiration to do so.
That aside, receiving donations in the usual fashion would compromise my privacy, as I would have to give someone somewhere an 'ID' to receive AT related funds and that would not work for many, very obvious reasons.
However, I've recently schooled myself on the benefits of Bitcoin and thought I'd give it a whirl. I have no idea how useful they are or will be in the future but if you feel you have received any value from my ramblings over the years, and you have so many bitcoins that they're becoming a burden you just cant bear any more, then fire a few this way and I'll buy a pizza or a pair of socks with them. 1Ax1wvma7cnd2Jiyii7uXPGtZvjJmT2R3b
Be well.

"This war on whistleblowers is not ancillary to journalism, but actually it directly affects it," says Trevor Timm, Executive Director of the Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF), a nonprofit that works to provide funding, encryption tools, and other resources to journalists who expose government secrets. "And it's making it much more difficult for the public to get the information they need."
Timm sat down with Reason TV's Zach Weissmueller to discuss what he refers to as the need to "bring the First Amendment into the 21st century" by employing greater levels of encryption to thwart government spies. Several high-profile journalists and media figures sit on the board of FPF, including journalists Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras, Pentagon papers whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, actor John Cusack, and, most recently, NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.
The discussion includes topics such as why encryption matters, what tools journalists, whistleblowers, and others who value privacy should be using to protect their communications, and what FPF plans to do if it's ever targeted by the government for funneling money to entities such as Wikileaks.
Approximately 8 minutes long.
Produced by Zach Weissmueller. Camera by Paul Detrick, Alexis Garcia, and Tracy Oppenheimer.
Visit http://reason.com/reasontv for downloadable versions of this video.

Tweet your questions for the chat with the hashtag #FutureCrimesConvo, and start reading Future Crimes now: http://www.futurecrimes.com
In FUTURE CRIMES, one of the world’s leading authorities on global security, Marc Goodman, takes readers deep into the digital underground to expose the alarming ways criminals, corporations, and even countries are using new and emerging technologies against you—and how this makes everyone more vulnerable than ever imagined.
Marc Goodman will be in conversation with Tim O'Reilly, CEO of O'Reilly Media. Since 1978, Tim O'Reilly has been a chronicler and catalyst of leading-edge development, honing in on the technology trends that really matter and galvanizing their adoption by amplifying "faint signals" from the alpha geeks who are creating the future. His company is publisher of the iconic "animal books" for software developers, creator of the first commercial website (GNN), organizer of the summit meeting that gave the open source software movement its name, and he was a key figure in the "Web 2.0" renaissance after the dot com bust, focusing the industry on the role of data rather than software in driving competitive advantage in the next generation of applications.

Every year for the last two decades, the information security community has descended upon Las Vegas to trade knowledge, sharpen skills, and challenge authority. As technology becomes ubiquitous, this desert gathering of hackers brings together some of the smartest minds in security — and the government agencies trying to recruit them.
Shot by Jordan Oplinger and Sam Thonis. Edited by Jordan Oplinger.
Check out the article here:
http://www.theverge.com/2012/8/17/3249232/def-con-xx-twenty-years-of-hacker-evolution More from The Verge:
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=theverge
Check out our full video catalog: http://www.youtube.com/theverge/videos
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Read More: http://www.theverge.com

We discovered a wide array of critical vulnerabilities in ISP-provided, RDK-based wireless gateways and set-top boxes from vendors including Cisco, Arris, Technicolor, and Motorola. Our research shows that it was possible to remotely and wirelessly tap all Internet and voice traffic passing through the affected gateways, impacting millions of ISP customers.
Imagine for a moment that you want a root shell on an ISP-provided wireless gateway, but you're tired of the same old web vulns. You want choice. Maybe you want to generate the passphrase for the hidden Wi-Fi network, or log into the web UI remotely using hard-coded credentials.
Don't have an Internet connection? Not to worry! You can just impersonate a legitimate ISP customer and hop on the nearest public hotspot running on another customer's wireless gateway. Once online, you can head on over to GitHub and look at the vulnerability fixes that haven't yet been pushed to customer equipment.
In this talk, we will take you through the research process that lead to these discoveries, including technical specifics of each exploit. After showcasing some of the more entertaining attack chains, we will discuss the remediation actions taken by the affected vendors.

Highlights:
- 4:05: Libre can't into VGA
- 4:45: "I have an adapter but it's in Queens"
- 5:20: "This is so sad", "I know my machine works" (literally everyone else who presented at HOPE XI had no problems)
- 6:25: "I might conceivably enjoy sleeping with some of you" - this angle doesn't show people leaving, you had to be there

We are bringing together a diverse group of Web architects, activists, engineers, archivists, scholars, journalists, and other stakeholders to explore the technology required to build a Decentralized Web and its impact.
Speaker include: Mitchell Baker, Vint Cerf, Cory Doctorow, Brewster Kahle, Tim Berners-Lee
Join the conversation by Tweeting: #DWebSummit
Live Streaming & Video Production by: http://www.argushd.com

Mark Frauenfelder, is editor-in-chief of MAKE magazine, founder of the collaborative weblog Boing Boing, and author of the book Made by Hand: Searching for Meaning in a Throwaway World. He sat down with Reason.tv's Ted Balaker to discuss cigar box guitars, the value of mistakes, and what the Do-It-Yourself movement can teach us about education.
Approximately 9 minutes. Shot by Alex Manning and Paul Detrick. Edited by Austin Bragg.
Go to http://reason.tv for downloadable iPod, HD and audio versions of this and all our videos, and subscribe to Reason.tv's YouTube channel to receive automatic notification when new material goes live.

Interdisciplinary art at Waterfront
A Chinese-Canadian based in New York, Sougwen Chung has a BFA in graphic design and a diploma in Interactive Art from Hyper Island in Sweden. Her interdisciplinary process spans drawing, video, animation, 3d, sound and installation.
An internationally exhibited artist, her work has been shown at The Art Directors Club in New York and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Geneva, Switzerland, amongst others.
Her work has been featured in The New Yorker, Dazed and Confused, and Creators Project, and her client list includes Chanel, Jagermeister, Nike, and Ghostly International, along with musicians Tom Waits and Sepalcure.
In your work as an interdisciplinary artist, you explore the transitional edges of art. Your practice encompasses installation, sculpture, hand drawing and performance, in an effort to experimentally challenge ideas about form. Can you tell us more about this approach of yours?
My approach to working with different mediums is a bit like journeying through different virtual realities of process. I’m of the generation that grew up very screen-influenced, and I have a background in UX design, so there is a tendency to be very cerebral about the design of various tools in different mediums influencing behavior / cognition. Each medium carries a set of rules, each tool has unique properties that influence the output. You could say my process is fueled by a fascination with digital interfaces that translates back into tangible, established art-making tools and practices.
Your Tumblr ”Goth Screenshots” has expanded to include a T-shirt merchandise line. Where did you get the idea to make ordinary interfaces dark and expressive?
“You have no new messages”. “Remember me on this computer”. In some ways these messages are how designers have projected the voice of the machine back towards the user. The dystopian humor of it comes out when you stare at the screen too long. It’s a strange reliance on dopamine hit of notifications that makes the technology invisible, among other things. But sometimes, inevitably, the prosaic veil of the interaction it is lifted and it can be unsettling, but also kind of funny.
Gothscreenshots is an ongoing series that explores the image of the interface when stripped down of the human element, of the white noise around it. By removing the message or call to action (or inaction) from the context it re-contextualizes it in a way that we interpret as dark and expressive. It makes the invisible visible, in a way that you’re unable to see in the same way again.
You have a BFA in graphic design and a diploma in Interactive Art from Hyper Island in Sweden. Has your time in Sweden made an impact on your art?
I cherish my time in Sweden. Particularly in the winter, the city of Stockholm was like a illuminated white canvas. My time in Hyper was stimulating in that it allowed me to observe different models for group learning. The energy of the school was uniquely vibrant as well, like living an encapsulated lifetime in the experimental curriculum. The two aspects, the education and environment, in tandem were quite memorable.

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link to online store if you would like to support this channel: support acnibo.eu/gb-en/?ibo=therajofmaharta
• European Parliament, Strasbourg, 11 September 2018 • Gerard Batten MEP (London), Leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP), Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy group - @GerardBattenMEP • Debate: Copyright in the Digital Single Market - Report: Axel Voss (A8-0245/2018) Report on the proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on copyright in the Digital Single Market [COM(2016)0593 - C8-0383/2016 - 2016/0280(COD)] Committee on Legal Affairs .................... • Video: EbS (European Parliament)